Sunday, July 10, 2016

ROH Road To "Final Battle '15": Ft. Lauderdale Review

The Young Bucks battle The House of Truth in the Main Event, and Alex Shelley makes a surprise appearance!

If this venue looks
familiar, it should. The War Memorial Auditorium in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida has
hosted numerous wrestling shows over the year. ECW ran shows here during the
mid to late ‘90s, while ROH ran its infamous Showdown In The Sun events here during WrestleMania Weekend in 2012.

Here we have a pre-show
match with four guys who I’m actually familiar with (more so than most ROH
pre-show matches). Martin Stone has make appearances in NXT & RevPro in the
UK, but has recently made a name for himself on the Southeast Independents.
Aaron Solo is a regular on Florida indies and other places in the Southeast.
Shaheem Ali has made a number of appearances on ROH pre-shows in the past, and
Colby Corino is, of course, the son of Steve Corino. Aside from a scary moment
at the start of the match, where Shaheem Ali fell backwards through the ropes,
seemingly landing head & neck first on the floor (couldn’t really tell, as
the camera was on the opposite side of the ring), this was a better-than
expected pre-show match. All four guys seemed to work hard, and for what it
was, it was pretty enjoyable. The team of Colby Corino & Shaheem Ali would
pick up the win here.

Main Show

1.) Mark Briscoe vs. Will
Ferrara: **3/4

We officially kick things
off with Mark Briscoe taking on Will Ferrara. This was a decent opening match.
It wasn’t the best opener in the world, but it was fine. A perfectly acceptable
pro-wrestling match. Mark Briscoe gets the win here, and he shakes hands with
Ferrara after the match.

For those who don’t know,
Tim Hughes is the “protégé” of “Brutal” Bob Evans. The running gag on
commentary is the speculation that Hughes might be the long lost son of Evans.
He’s facing Kyle O’Reilly here. This was pretty much a squash match. Hughes got
a few shots in, but they were very minor, as O’Reilly dominated and put Hughes
away in quick fashion.

After the match, Kyle O’Reilly
cuts a promo saying that Tim Hughes just learned what happens when you piss him
off. He says that Adam Cole learns that lesson the hard way at Final Battle 2015. O’Reilly says he’ll
kick Cole’s ass, and he will be the next ROH World Champion.

3.) Adam Cole vs. Kenny
King: ***1/4

Speaking of Adam Cole, he’s
in action next against Kenny King. It’s nice that we’re getting more singles
matches involving King, as I’ve always preferred him over Rhett Titus, as far
as singles competition goes. I thought this was a good match. It had the
potential to be better, but still, for a match that went just over eleven
minutes, it was still solid. Cole worked over King’s leg, trying to set up the
Figure Four, but King fought back, and we got some good back & forth action
here. Eventually, Cole would pick up the win.

After the match, Cole blows
off a handshake with King, and swears that Kyle O’Reilly will be finished with
ROH after Final Battle.

4.) War Machine vs. The
Dirty Blondes (Leo Brien & Mike Patrick): DUD

The Dirty Blondes are
actually pretty big dudes. It just makes this outing by War Machine even more
impressive, as they make quick work of their opponents here. War Machine will
be challenging The Kingdom for the ROH World Tag Team Titles at Final Battle 2015.

5.) ROH World TV Title –
Roderick Strong vs. Delirious: ***1/2

Since winning the ROH World
TV Title, Roderick Strong has decided to start a “Roddy vs. The World”
challenge, where he’s declared that he’ll take on any and all comers. On this
particular night, Delirious has returned to answer Strong’s challenge. These
two actually have some history, as they had a feud back in (I believe) 2007. As
far as this match goes, I’d say it was pretty good. Probably the best match on
the show up to this point. Strong always delivers a good match no matter where
he is on the card, and I think Delirious did a solid job here as well. Of
course, Roderick Strong retaining his title was never in doubt, but this was
still an enjoyable house show title match.

Now this match is filled
with a ton of “unique” personalities. I wasn’t expecting much from this match,
but it turned out to be much better than I thought it would be. It had the right
mix of some good action, as well as fair amount of comedy, which was actually
pretty funny. At one point, Castle put Cheeseburger on his shoulders so he
could have a better shot against Moose. That was funny. This was just a fun
match. It wasn’t the best match of the show or anything, but it was very
entertaining to watch. Moose gets the win here after hitting a spear on
Cheeseburger.

Up next, we were originally
scheduled to get ACH vs. Bobby Fish in a singles match. However, before that
match could begin, ACH requested that the match be changed to a tag team match.
Since his usual partner, Matt Sydal, has a match with Jay Briscoe coming up
later in the show, ACH said that he’s found another partner, in the form of
Alex Shelley!!

At the time, I know there
were a few complaints about not advertising Alex Shelley beforehand. The only
reason I could come up with for why they didn’t (and I’m sure this is likely
the explanation) is that Shelley was make a big surprise return on ROH TV that
very weekend (which hadn’t aired everywhere yet, since this show was on a
Friday Night), and him being announced for this show would spoil that reveal on
ROH TV. Anyway, lets talk about the match, because it was actually really good!
Fish & O’Reilly are such an amazing team. At the same time, however, for
being a first-time pairing, ACH & Shelley did a good job here as well. I
like how this match was in some ways, a familiar one (reDRagon has faced Alex
Shelley on a number of occasions in the form of Fish & O’Reilly vs. The
Time Spillers of Alex Shelley & KUSHIDA), but different at the same time,
with this new pairing. There was some very good action throughout this match.
I’d say it was one of the best matches on this show. reDRagon would eventually
get the win, but ACH & Alex Shelley did very well in their first outing as
a tag team.

8.) Jay Briscoe vs. Matt
Sydal: ***1/2

I think this match was
actually supposed to take place several months prior (on one of the Conquest Tour events, if I recall
correctly), but a minor injury to Sydal changed those plans. They finally had
their singles encounter here, and I thought it was a very good match. It was a
little shorter than I was expecting (clocking in at just under twelve minutes),
and it wasn’t quite as good as I thought it would be, but still, this was an
enjoyable match from start to finish between two of the best wrestlers in ROH.
In the end, Jay Briscoe would score the victory, but the two did shake hands
after the match.

So The Young Bucks are
basically trying to help out their Bullet Club partner AJ Styles by softening
up Jay Lethal before Final Battle 2015.
I thought this was a really good Main Event! For me, it’s an easy contender for
the best match on this particular show. The Young Bucks were really over with
the fans in Ft. Lauderdale (as you would expect), and they delivered here, as
they always do. Once again, the team of Lethal & Dijak really impressed
here (Dijak in particular looked very good). It’s a shame that Dijak’s
days in The House of Truth would be numbered, as this Lethal/Dijak team has
been a lot of fun to watch. I thought the match was hurt a little bit by a spot
towards the end of the match, where Lethal pulled the referee out of the ring
when The Young Bucks seemingly had the match won, which led to Taeler Hendrix
eating a superkick. I know it’s a live event, and I really shouldn’t care that
much, but it was just a little too much shenanigans for my liking. The Young
Bucks would overcome this brief hiccup to score the win over The House of
Truth. The Young Bucks celebrate their victory as the show comes to a close.

Overall: 7.5/10

While this wasn’t a show
that you absolutely need to see, it was entertaining to watch from start to
finish, and very easy to sit through. This show just felt like it flew by, and
that a real complement. I know we all live for those truly amazing shows that
produce a plethora of classic matches, but shows like this can be just an
enjoyable. Aside from two squash matches that were meant to build up Kyle
O’Reilly & War Machine for their upcoming matches at Final Battle 2015, the rest of the card was pretty solid. While
nothing was really great, there wasn’t anything that was bad either. Even the
pre-show match was relatively decent. As far as standout matches go, I’d say
reDRagon vs. ACH & Alex Shelley, and The Young Bucks vs. Jay Lethal &
Donovan Dijak are the two matches that are worth checking out. As a whole, this
was simply an entertaining show from beginning to end.